Laboratorio de Ecología, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras (IIMyC), Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata (UNMdP) - Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Funes 3250, 7600, Mar del Plata, Argentina.
Grupo Humedales y Ambientes Costeros, Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras (IIMyC), Universidad Nacional de Mar del Plata (UNMdP) - Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas (CONICET), Funes 3250, 7600, Mar del Plata, Argentina.
Oecologia. 2024 Mar;204(3):575-588. doi: 10.1007/s00442-024-05513-2. Epub 2024 Feb 20.
The role of facilitation in shaping natural communities has primarily been studied in the context of plant assemblages, while its relevance for mobile animals remains less understood. Our study investigates whether reciprocal interspecific facilitation may exist between fire ants (Solenopsis richteri) and cavies (Cavia aperea), two mobile animals, in the SW Atlantic coast brackish marshes. Field samples showed a spatial association between ant mounds and cavies, and that ants prefer to use cavy runways for movement within the marsh. Through experiments involving transplanting the dominant plant, cordgrass (Spartina densiflora), and manipulating cavy presence in areas with and without ant mounds, we observed that cavies forage extensively (and defecate more) near ant mounds. The ants actively remove cavy droppings in their mound vicinity. These ant activities and interactions with cavy droppings led to reduced moisture and organic content while increasing nitrate and phosphate levels in marsh sediment. Consequently, this enhanced plant growth, indirectly facilitating the cavies, which preferred consuming vegetation near ant mounds. These cascading indirect effects persisted over time; even four months after cavies left the marshes, transplanted plants near ant mounds remained larger and exhibited more leaf senescence when exposed to cavy herbivory. Therefore, the networks of positive interactions appear to generate simultaneous selection among species (populations), promoting coexistence within the community. Although complex, these reciprocal facilitative effects among mobile animals may be more common than currently believed and should be further studied to gain a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms driving species coexistence in natural communities.
促进作用在塑造自然群落中的作用主要在植物组合的背景下进行了研究,而其对移动动物的相关性则知之甚少。我们的研究调查了两种移动动物 - 火蚁(Solenopsis richteri)和豚鼠(Cavia aperea)之间是否存在互惠的种间促进作用,它们存在于南大西洋沿岸的半咸水沼泽中。实地样本显示,蚁丘与豚鼠之间存在空间关联,并且蚂蚁更喜欢在沼泽内使用豚鼠的跑道进行移动。通过涉及移植优势植物 - 高草(Spartina densiflora)以及在有和没有蚁丘的区域操纵豚鼠存在的实验,我们观察到豚鼠在蚁丘附近广泛觅食(并且更多地排泄)。蚂蚁在其蚁丘附近积极清除豚鼠的粪便。这些蚂蚁活动以及与豚鼠粪便的相互作用导致沼泽沉积物中的水分和有机含量减少,同时增加硝酸盐和磷酸盐水平。因此,这促进了植物生长,间接促进了喜欢在蚁丘附近食用植物的豚鼠。这些级联的间接效应持续存在;即使在豚鼠离开沼泽四个月后,在蚁丘附近移植的植物在暴露于豚鼠的食草性时仍然更大,并且叶片衰老更多。因此,这些积极的相互作用网络似乎在物种(种群)之间同时产生选择,促进了群落内的共存。尽管复杂,但这些移动动物之间互惠的促进作用可能比目前想象的更为普遍,应该进一步研究以更好地理解驱动自然群落中物种共存的潜在机制。